The house was only pleasantly filled, and there was no crush anywhere. Shaking hands and bowing to many people on his way, Armour passed through the drawing rooms, the library, and the dining room, where on a long table, pots of delicate maiden hair and slender ferns nodded over dishes of dainty china and glassware heaped high with sweetmeats and every dainty viand possible to procure for the elaborate menu of a ball supper. The wide hall where the dancing was going on was, in spite of the season of the year, like a bower in its profusion of growing plants and cut flowers, whose heavy rich odors were as incense to the nostrils of his cousin—a woman of tropical tastes. Everybody seemed to be stirring about. There were no dull groups along the walls and the ripple of conversation and laughter was a constant one; and no one was in need of special entertainment he was happy to observe. This was the result of Mrs. Colonibel’s invariable custom of doubling the number of her young lady guests by members of the opposite sex, the usual proclivity of men to The musicians were playing sweetly and with no lapses into braying discordancy a new waltz, “Vive la Canada.” The whole house was flooded with their strains, so strong and soul-stirring, yet so well-modulated that those in the near library were not disturbed by them. Patriotism it was probably that made the blood stir so strangely in Armour’s veins, and his face flush so dark a crimson. His eyes were fixed on Vivienne, who was dancing with the tallest man in the garrison, an officer of the Royal Engineers. Armour noticed that they made frequent pauses, and speculated a little about it, whether it was owing to the awkwardness of her partner, or to her own inclination not to keep on her feet during the entire progress of a round dance. Of the amount of attention that she was attracting she appeared to be quite unconscious, but that she was quite well aware of it, he was fully persuaded. “Accept my felicitations on the subject of your ward,” said a roguish voice in his ear; “your reward perhaps I should call her, considering the satisfactory termination of your cares on her behalf.” The waltz had ceased and a group of men surrounded the place where Vivienne stood, her white velvet gown gleaming like a snowdrop against the crimson curtain behind her. She seemed to be listening rather than talking and Armour was struck as Camperdown had been by her slight ceremonious air of reserve and by the absence of any girlish eagerness of delight in this her first ball. He, a man that had fallen into the habit of taking no pleasure in anything, felt like a boy tonight, and suppressing a smile he turned away and sought Mrs. Colonibel to hear any instructions that she might have to give him. An hour later, while he was having a quiet stroll along the verandas, carefully avoiding the conservatory, where a few stray couples were wandering among the flowers, he came suddenly upon two people who stood in a recess. He turned quickly on his heel, but not before he had noticed the He had scarcely arrived there before a hand was laid on his shoulder. “Go to Miss Delavigne, will you, Armour?” said Captain Macartney, his face a shade paler than usual. “I think she would like some tea, or an ice.” With considerable alacrity Mr. Armour obeyed him. He found Vivienne sitting down, her face extremely flushed. “It is warm here,” he said, cutting a slit in the bunting with his knife. “I do not wonder that you are overcome; I will bring you some tea.” “I fear that our experiment is not a success,” he said a short time later, as he stood watching her drink the tea. “Do you refer to this ball?” said Vivienne, lifting her eyebrows. "Yes; I encouraged Flora in it, for I thought it would be a pleasure to you. “I can think of nothing but my hackneyed expression of your kindness and my gratitude.” “And that I do not believe; you talk of gratitude, yet your actions belie your words.” “No,” he returned; “but you are younger than I am.” “Judy and I saw a poor creature to-day when we were with Stargarde. She had been starved to death; it was horrible. If a few of these gowns here to-night were sold they would keep some needy people in food for a year. And the wines that are drunk—they do us no good, and often much harm.” “Would it please you to hear me say that I shall never have wine offered in a mixed assembly again?” “It would, Mr. Armour.” “Then I say it; and now is that shadow to lift from your face?” It did not, and Vivienne rose and said in some embarrassment: “Shall we not go to Mrs. Colonibel? I have not seen her for some time.” “Tell me first why you are so ill at ease with me,” he said with some doggedness. “You know that I am anxious to atone for my past sins of neglect toward you, yet you give me no chance. You are restless, and I know your one thought is to get away from here.” Her eyes sparkled. “Mr. Armour, it is useless for us to try to agree. We are like fire and steel. “I seem to rouse all the opposition in you,” he said; “why is it?” “I would rather not tell you.” “I am tired of this constant, ‘I would rather not tell you,’” he uttered in undisguised impatience. “You speak the truth with more offense than most women tell a falsehood.” She played with her fan without speaking to him. “Stargarde tells me that you wished to have some conversation with me about your parents,” he continued; “yet, in your willfulness, you will not mention them to me.” There was something in this new accusation that touched Vivienne’s sense of humor, which was always present with her. He saw her roguish smile and resented it. Scarcely knowing what he did he seized the little white-gloved hand in his: “We are alone for the first time for days. Ask me now what questions you will, and promise me that you will treat me with more friendliness for the rest of your brief stay here.” “Ask you—promise you,” she said slowly, and with as much composure as though her hands were free. “Mr. Armour, we cannot be friends because according to you we are not equals.” “Some women will lie to their—to their acquaintances,” she went on. “I will not; and I say that to a man of your indomitable pride, a child that he has bought and paid for, as it were, and that has grown into a womanhood that may occasionally divert him, is not for an instant to be considered on an equality with him—that is, in his estimation. It is a toy, a puppet, with which he may occasionally amuse himself, then throw it aside.” A variety of expressions chased themselves over his face while she was speaking. When she finished he dropped her hands with a smile: “I am right; I thought that your irrepressible and suspicious pride—with which mine cannot be compared—was at the bottom of this; but I will subdue it. Vivienne——” “Is not this rather a serious and gladiatorial kind of conversation for a ball,” she interrupted, “a place where one should utter only small talk?” He leaned against the wall, and stroking his mustache in a hasty and disturbed manner muttered: “You are only a girl, yet you have yourself under better control than most women. Would nothing break you down?” At that moment the conversation of some ladies standing by a raised, curtained window, opening on the veranda, became clearly audible. “Oh, no, no, my dear Mrs. Macartney, I did not mean to hint at such a thing,” interposed the low, cutting voice of a lady well-known to Mr. Armour; “I merely said that a little less haughtiness, a little more humility of deportment, would be befitting to such a very young person who has so broad a bar sinister across her escutcheon.” “Her father was a thief, you know,” chimed in a third hard, vulgar little voice; “a low, miserable thief, who stole money just as meanly as a person taking it out of a till. I don’t believe in smoothing over big offenses and coming down so hard on little ones. The Armours are very good to want to introduce her into society; but I think a girl like that ought to be left in seclusion. I pity Mrs. Colonibel.” “And it’s me own daughter-in-law I’d like to see her,” said Mrs. Macartney boisterously. There was a rustling of silk, two swift “Ohs” of ejaculation, two attempted apologies, and then a subdued snorting which told them that the Irishwoman had left her opponents in possession of the field. Vivienne sank back on her chair, and Armour turned away to hide the anger of his face. She thought that he was about to interfere, and touched He shook his head impatiently just as the cutting voice went on, “How exceedingly brusque that Irishwoman is; I cannot bear to have her near me.” “She fancied that she was exploding an important family secret,” said the vulgar little voice, “when all the world knows that the French demoiselle has jilted her stepson.” “Indeed?” eagerly. “I have not heard that.” “I am surprised that you have not. She is said to be setting her cap for Mr. Armour. He is richer than Captain Macartney, you know. French girls are artful.” Armour made a step forward, but Vivienne laid a hand on his arm. “There is some one coming,” she said, and putting up her fan to partly conceal the terrible pallor of her face, and seeing that he was unable to speak she said in a clear voice, “Did you fancy, Mr. Armour, that this is my first ball? I have been at one other in OrlÉans chez les Dalesworthys. Mrs. Dalesworthy permitted her daughters to put on white gowns and sit behind a screen of flowers for ten minutes only to observe the dancing. I accompanied them, and being anxious to see one of the English princes who was passing through OrlÉans and had honored the Dalesworthys by being present, I stepped aside from the screen and looked steadfastly at him, being, as I thought, The passers-by were gone, and her voice broke, “That is what I suspected—dreaded,” she said bitterly; “and it is the last humiliation to which I shall be subjected in this unhappy house. Let me go,” to Armour, who had put his arm about her, “I do not wish to hear you speak.” “Unhappy child,” he said in a low voice, “go then, if you will, and I will come to you as soon as I can.” Vivienne went swiftly upstairs, till she stopped in the prettily furnished hall outside her rooms, and put her hand confusedly to her forehead. Stargarde lay on a broad divan, her face as white as “Judy,” cried Vivienne, springing to Stargarde’s side, “what is this?” “Oh, what a wretch I am!” exclaimed Judy. “Stargarde, dear Stargarde, won’t you speak to me? Come, wake up, or I shall go for Brian.” “What is it? What is wrong with her?” exclaimed Vivienne. “The usual thing, one of her attacks. Try to rouse her and I’ll get Brian,” and slipping rapidly downstairs by means of a hand placed on the railing, Judy disappeared. “Stargarde, my darling,” murmured Vivienne, caressing her tortured face, “look at me.” One glance of intense affection she received from Stargarde’s deep blue eyes, then the distorted features composed themselves, and the sufferer seemed to sink into a disturbed sleep. So quickly that Vivienne wondered how he could have gotten there, Camperdown gently thrust her aside, and knelt down by the divan. “Stargarde,” he said slightly shaking her, “Stargarde,” then bitterly, “Too late; she has gone off.” “Come in here,” whispered Judy, drawing Vivienne into her room. “Brian is furious with me; he was afraid that one of these things was coming on, and when Val came for him to go downstairs, “What is it? Oh, what is it she has?” and Vivienne clasped her hands in distress. “I call it ‘the misery of the world,’” said Judy, dropping her voice. “A few years ago Stargarde was in New York, visiting some philanthropic people. One evening they were going to make a round of the slums. They put on old clothes and took some policemen, and Stargarde went with them. They got into wicked places where men and women of all nations were; I don’t know what they saw, but there were some dreadful things, and ever since then, when Stargarde gets run down and has nothing to take her mind off it, she’ll sit down somewhere, and all the badness that is going on in the world comes up before her like a panorama; she thinks about the men and women in China and Japan and India, and the poor wretches in London and New York, and it almost makes her crazy. I’ve seen her throwing herself about just like an actress on a stage, only with poor Stargarde it is real. You know how big she is; her limbs get convulsed and her face looks like the LaocoÖn’s, and she is so beautiful; wherever she is and one of these seizures comes on, some one sends for Brian. I’ve seen him sitting by her with the perspiration dropping off his face. It gives him an awful fright, for Vivienne was unable to speak. “This is not a bad one,” said Judy gazing consolingly into her terror-stricken face. “She’s in a kind of trance; I don’t think Brian will even have to give her morphine—wait till I see,” and she tip-toed to the door. “She’s lying quite still,” she reported, coming back; “only moaning occasionally. Vivienne dear, I am going to bed. I don’t dare to face Brian again; he looks so annoyed.” When Mr. Armour mounted to the topmost hall in search of Vivienne, his eye fell on Stargarde lying in unconsciousness on the divan. “What does this mean?” he asked of Mammy Juniper who sat by her. “Again the Lord has laid his hand on her,” said the old woman solemnly. Mr. Armour seated himself beside his half-sister, and affectionately drew the rug more closely about her. “Where is Camperdown?” he inquired. “He’s gone to get some supper for Miss Judy,” and Mammy looked toward the closed doors of Vivienne’s rooms. She rarely mentioned Vivienne’s name, but Mr. Armour knew by her expression that the two girls were together. “Tear her out of your heart, my son,” said A terrible gloom and depression overspread the face that he held in his hands as he leaned forward supporting his elbows on his knees. “Mammy’s boy,” said the old woman affectionately fondling his head. “If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out.” “Oh this agony of indecision!” he muttered, looking about him as if for help; “if I only knew what is right——” “Trust Mammy,” said the colored woman persuasively. “She has asked the Lord about it.” “Hush, old woman!” interposed Camperdown coming up the steps behind her bearing a tray aloft. “Give your counsels of vengeance to the winds, and don’t stir up this family to any more wickedness. Try to soften their hearts, not harden them. And don’t be so sure that you are a messenger of the Lord. I think the devil sometimes tampers with your messages. Stanton, Miss Delavigne is in trouble about Stargarde——” Armour immediately got up—a resolved look upon his face. “Here, take this with you,” said Dr. Camperdown handing him the tray. “Persuade Vivienne to go downstairs. Mammy Juniper and I will look after Stargarde.” Dr. Camperdown looked severely at Mammy The old woman groaned, shook her head, and with an appearance of the greatest dejection sat swinging herself to and fro. |